Captain Cook’s Legendary Ship HMS Endeavour Found Off Rhode Island

Researchers believe they have found the wreckage of the legendary ship HMS Endeavour used by the famous British explorer Captain James Cook.

In a historic 1768-71 voyage Captain Cook sailed the British Royal Navy research vessel into uncharted waters, made contact with the indigenous people of Australasia and the Pacific, mapped the globe in the process and claimed Australia for the British Crown.

The Rhode Island Marine Archaeology Project, which is leading the search effort, said in a statement posted on its website that it is 80% to 100% sure that the remains of the HMS Endeavour is among sunken wrecks off the state’s coast.

Cook used the Endeavour to claim Australia for the British during his historic 1768-71 voyage.

In 2014, the Australian National Maritime Museum signed an agreement to help the Rhode Island group find the lost vessel.

“To be able to find the last resting place of the Endeavour would truly be a nationally significant event, if not internationally,” said Kevin Sumption at the time. Sumption is the director of the Australian museum, which features a replica of the Endeavour.

The roughly 100-foot vessel was part of a fleet of 13 ships that the British scuttled during the Revolutionary War in 1778 to blockade Newport Harbor. It had been listed in the records under a different name, the Lord Sandwich.

The Rhode Island group useddocuments in London to map and then analyze sites where the ship may be found in the harbour. It said remote sensing data suggests that the suspected Endeavour shipwreck may still exist.

Researchers are scheduled to outline plains to confirm the wreck at a news conference Wednesday in Providence.